Students to Teach - Linguistic Society of America...Micro-teaching sessions Dossier review &...

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Preparing L inguistics Graduate Students to Teach

LSA Annual Meeting 1/4/2017

Salt Lake City

LSA Linguistics in Higher Education Committee Ann Bunger, Indiana University Gaillynn Clements, Duke University and University of North Carolina School of the Arts Miranda McCarvel, University of Utah Evan Bradley, Penn State Brandywine J on Bakos, Indiana State University David Bowie, University of Alaska Anchorage Lynn Burley, University of Central Arkansas Anne Charity Hudley, University of California, Santa Barbara Sonja Launspach, Idaho State University Alex Motut, University of Toronto

The Challenge “The tendency to devalue teacher preparation in parts of doctoral education is at odds wi th the ever-growing national pursui t of effective teaching.” – MLA Task Force on Doctoral Study in Modern Language and Literature, 2014

Our Goal To start a conversation about how we are training linguistics graduate students to teach. ● What kind of skills do teachers of linguistics need? ● What kind of training programs are being implemented? ● What are their strengths and weaknesses? ● How can the effectiveness of a training program be evaluated? ● What first steps might a unit take to develop a training program? ● What’s on the horizon?

Panelists

Moderator: Raichle Farrelly, St. Michael’s College P resenters: Anne Curzan, University of Michigan J ulia Moore & Matt Goldrick, Northwestern University Alexandra Motut, University of Toronto Mary Niepokuj, Purdue University

Panel Format

1) Introduction

2) Panelist presentations

3) Series of questions

4) Additional discussion

First Steps for Developing a Training Program

Keep an eye out for recommendations after the conference. When the document is complete, it will be available here: ● bit.ly/ 2kLbMic

Or contact Ann Bunger for more information: ● acbunger@indiana.edu

Applied Linguistics Training at Northwestern

• Introduction to program (fall & winter quarters)• Ling 383: Applied Linguistics for English Language

Teaching• Mentoring for new ELP Tutors in ELP• Mentoring for solo teaching in ELP

0

Centralized Training at Northwestern• Mentored

Discussions of Teaching

– MOOC-Centered Learning Community

• STAR: Searle Teaching-As-Research

• Teaching Certificate Program

Commitm

entLevel

High

Low

TEACHING ASSISTANT TRAINING IN LINGUISTICS

AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO

Alexandra Motut, University of Toronto

Levels of Training

Teaching Assistants Training Program

(University of Toronto)

Advanced University Teaching

Preparation Certificate

Teaching Fundamentals

Certificate

Department of Linguistics

TA Training for new TAs PD Workshops

Peer-to-Peer training

Peer-to-Peer / Train-the-trainer Peer trainers are typically experienced graduate students, many of whom have themselves received additional training in pedagogy and/or how to train TAs

Teaching Context at University of Toronto

Teaching Assistants are unionized (CUPE3902) Some paid training is mandated by the collective

agreement between the Union and the University Graduate students must do ~120 hours (min) of

teaching per year for funding package; many do additional teaching on top of this.

Upper-year graduate students are given the opportunity to teach courses as primary instructor

Pedagogical Training in Linguistics 3-4 hours mandatory job training for new TAs

(MA and PhD) Led by linguistics peer-trainer and TATP peer trainer Sample grading activities; grading as a team Active learning techniques Lesson-planning for tutorials, leading discussions,

trouble-shooting in tutorial Reporting and administrative duties University of Toronto policies related to duties

Pedagogical Training in Linguistics Continuing support through optional (paid and unpaid)

workshops at Centre for Teaching Support Professional development seminar for 1st year PhD

students; focus on: Gathering evidence of effective teaching to eventually create

dossier Reflective practices and feedback Creating teaching materials and documenting teaching

effectiveness Transitioning from TA primary instructor

Pedagogical Training in Linguistics Strong tradition of faculty-graduate student

mentorship: “Back to Teaching” meeting with all faculty and graduate

student course instructors (2x year) Faculty mentors are assigned to graduate students

teaching a course for the first time Workshops led by graduate students (e.g. “Lead Writing

TA”), faculty, and guests, e.g.: Avoiding plagiarism through effective assignment design Respecting gender diversity in the classroom

Training at the Institutional Level

Centre for Teaching Support and Innovation: Teaching Assistants’ Training Program (TATP)

Wide variety of teaching workshops Most designed and facilitated by peer trainers

Peer observation of teaching & feedback Micro-teaching sessions Dossier review & feedback

Teaching Assistant Training at Purdue

Mary Niepokuj

Nuts and Bolts of Teaching Linguistics

Approaches to teaching specific topics in linguistics Many tasks, such as analyzing linguistic data, are different from

anything students have done in other classes

How to choose a textbook

Preparing engaging assignments, activities

Structuring assessments to accurately reflect what you want students to learn These last three are applicable to any course TAs will teach in the

future

The Importance of Audience

Teaching does not take place in a vacuum

In structuring a course, TAs need to consider where the course they are teaching fits in to the students’ education as a whole

Is the course required for specific majors? If so, why? Does the course give students in these majors the training they need?

Does the course fill particular distribution requirements at the university (for example, “Human Cultures”)? If so, is the course structured so that it actually relates to these requirements?

Can the work TAs assign in the course be related to the university’s desired learning outcomes?

Making Choices

Every aspect of a course – the topics covered or not covered, the textbook used, what work is assigned, how the work is assessed – is a choice

TAs should be able to articulate to themselves and to their students why they made the choices that they did

Reflective Teaching

One of the best things TAs can do to improve their teaching is to reflect upon their experiences as learners

Though graduate students may not have much experience in teaching, they generally have a lot of experience in being students. To the extent that they can draw upon this experience, they can gain confidence in the choices they make as teachers

Putting themselves in their students’ shoes leads to treating students with respect, a necessary component of good teaching

Professionalization

TA training should have an eye to graduate students’ ultimate goal of employment

Students prepare materials in the course that go into a teaching dossier they can draw on when job hunting

At Purdue students can use the TA training course to satisfy requirements for certificates in teaching from the Center for Instructional Excellence, demonstrating to future employers that they are serious about teaching

Observing TAs in the training course gives me material I often draw upon when writing letters of recommendation.